I've read several posts/chapters and am blown away by this guy. He's like a more intelligent, more scientific, more coherent, more wise version of me who also can write a heck of a lot better. And has a great sense of humor. I'm an instant David Chapman fan.

So when I read there are no spiritual problems, once again I felt like I was being exposed to how I'd look upon the world if I could just see and describe things as well as Chapman can.

Not that we're philosophical clones. He's very much into Tantra and a form of Tibetan Buddhism (which may be the same thing). I'm not much into anything these days, finding organized whatever unappealing in my current churchlessness.

But Chapman's Buddhism is so barely Buddhist (compared to traditional Buddhism), I hardly noticed it when I read his post -- which energized and delighted me. Maybe you'll feel the same.

Here's some passages that I especially liked.

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Many religions start with the idea that there is some hideous problem with all of existence.

The problem might not be obvious. The job of the religion is to convince you that:

you’ve got this problem (and so does everyone)

it is really, really bad—much worse than it appears

it affects everything in the whole universe, so there’s no escaping it

it’s so vast and awful and incomprehensible that there’s no practical way of solving it

so you’d better buy our brand of magic instead.

For example:

After you die, demons will torture you forever, because someone ate a magic apple.

All of existence is pervaded by impermanence, suffering, and non-self.

Life is inherently meaningless, so it is impossible to act.

(These are, of course, the cosmic defects proposed by Christianity, Buddhism, and existentialism.)

According to tantra, there are no such problems.

...A spiritual problem, according to religions that believe in them, requires a spiritual solution. But there are none. This belief diverts your energy into attempting to solve an imaginary spiritual problem, and away from practical solutions to real, practical problems.

...If the universe were about us, the world would be wrong. We don’t like suffering, and there’s quite a bit of it going around.

If there were a God, the world would be wrong. If someone designed the world, he did a piss-poor job. We should fire him. Or maybe he’s a bastard, and we should kill him.

If the world were supposed to be some way it is not, it would be wrong. But “supposed” supposes a supposer. According to whose criteria could the world be judged?

There is no God; the world was not designed; it was not meant to be some way; there is no cosmic plan to compare it against.

Therefore, there can be no fundamental problem with it. We have no grounds for complaint.

Stuff happens, mostly for no particular reason. Some of it, we like; some of it, we don’t.

...There are no spiritual problems; but there are real problems. Small ones like dirty dishes in the sink, and big ones like global warming.

Spaciousness and passion both lead you to regard all situations as workable. Nothing is cosmically awful; practical problems do not prove the world is wrong.

“Workable” does not guarantee that there is a solution. “Nothing is fundamentally wrong with the world” does not mean that everything can be fixed, or that life can be made perfect. Catastrophe is always possible. Death is always certain.

Passion and spaciousness together imply that you care deeply about the world, that you urgently want to fix problems, that you always do your best—and you are unruffled when you fail.

According to tantra, the world is fantastic. According to tantra, tantrikas should enjoy sensual pleasures as thoroughly and often as possible. There is no problem with that—if it has no negative practical consequences.

According to tantra, it is possible to enjoy everything.

Nothing in the world can be objectively bad, because there is no external standard to measure it against. “Good” and “bad” are judgements based only on what you happen to like and dislike. Tantra trains you to suspend such judgement.

According to mainstream Buddhism, mundane reality is utterly impure and defiled. The sacred is found only elsewhere.

I've been struck, reading some of your recent posts, by the similarity of our views, also.

I think it's fabulous that you are presenting them from a completely churchless perspective. I find the tantric Buddhist framework helpful, but it's bound to put a lot of people off. Maybe I should follow your example and drop all that historical baggage...

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